Sowing of spring cereals in broad bands and the effect of sowing rate, rolling and irrigation on the results

In 1971 two large field experiments, one for spring wheat and the other for barley, were carried out on silty clay soil in southern Finland. Three sowing methods were compared at three sowing rate levels (wheat: 140, 275 or 400 kg/ha, barley: 100, 200 or 300 kg/ha), at two levels of rolling (not rol...

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Main Authors: Paavo Elonen, Osmo Kara, Leo Autio
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Scientific Agricultural Society of Finland 1972-09-01
Series:Agricultural and Food Science
Online Access:https://journal.fi/afs/article/view/71818
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spelling doaj-dee001c94cc14a0da3c113bfd9a0c0be2020-11-25T01:47:53ZengScientific Agricultural Society of FinlandAgricultural and Food Science1459-60671795-18951972-09-01443Sowing of spring cereals in broad bands and the effect of sowing rate, rolling and irrigation on the resultsPaavo Elonen0Osmo Kara1Leo Autio2Department of Agricultural Chemistry, University of HelsinkiFinnish Research Institute of Engineering in Agriculture and Forestry, Rukkila, HelsinkiDepartment of Agricultural Engineering, University of HelsinkiIn 1971 two large field experiments, one for spring wheat and the other for barley, were carried out on silty clay soil in southern Finland. Three sowing methods were compared at three sowing rate levels (wheat: 140, 275 or 400 kg/ha, barley: 100, 200 or 300 kg/ha), at two levels of rolling (not rolled or rolled by a Cambridge-roller, 330 kg/m), and at two levels of irrigation (not irrigated or irrigated twice in June, 30 mm at both times). Wheat produced 9 ± 2 % higher grain yields sown with a 12.5 cm spacing between coulters in 7 cm bands than in rows of 2 cm. The increases in yield were almost equal irrespective of the seeding rate, rolling or irrigation. The sowing methods had no noteworthy influence on the ripening or the weight of the wheat grains. Barley responded to the sowing methods to a lesser extent than did wheat. Bands 7 cm wide with 12.5 cm spacing resulted in 5 ± 2 % higher wheat yields and 2 ± 1 % higher barley yields than did bands 10 cm wide with 25 cm spacing. The results indicate that the band method with relatively small spacings between the bands is worth further and more detailed study. An increase in the seeding rate from low to »normal» increased the yields, speeded up ripening and decreased the weight of grains, but when normal seeding rates were exceeded the grain yields were not further improved. Rolling speeded up ripening but did not significantly increase the grain yields. Of the factors included in the study, the sprinkler irrigation affected the yields most by increasing the grain yields of wheat by 23 ± 22 % and those of barley by 29 ± 9 %.https://journal.fi/afs/article/view/71818
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Paavo Elonen
Osmo Kara
Leo Autio
spellingShingle Paavo Elonen
Osmo Kara
Leo Autio
Sowing of spring cereals in broad bands and the effect of sowing rate, rolling and irrigation on the results
Agricultural and Food Science
author_facet Paavo Elonen
Osmo Kara
Leo Autio
author_sort Paavo Elonen
title Sowing of spring cereals in broad bands and the effect of sowing rate, rolling and irrigation on the results
title_short Sowing of spring cereals in broad bands and the effect of sowing rate, rolling and irrigation on the results
title_full Sowing of spring cereals in broad bands and the effect of sowing rate, rolling and irrigation on the results
title_fullStr Sowing of spring cereals in broad bands and the effect of sowing rate, rolling and irrigation on the results
title_full_unstemmed Sowing of spring cereals in broad bands and the effect of sowing rate, rolling and irrigation on the results
title_sort sowing of spring cereals in broad bands and the effect of sowing rate, rolling and irrigation on the results
publisher Scientific Agricultural Society of Finland
series Agricultural and Food Science
issn 1459-6067
1795-1895
publishDate 1972-09-01
description In 1971 two large field experiments, one for spring wheat and the other for barley, were carried out on silty clay soil in southern Finland. Three sowing methods were compared at three sowing rate levels (wheat: 140, 275 or 400 kg/ha, barley: 100, 200 or 300 kg/ha), at two levels of rolling (not rolled or rolled by a Cambridge-roller, 330 kg/m), and at two levels of irrigation (not irrigated or irrigated twice in June, 30 mm at both times). Wheat produced 9 ± 2 % higher grain yields sown with a 12.5 cm spacing between coulters in 7 cm bands than in rows of 2 cm. The increases in yield were almost equal irrespective of the seeding rate, rolling or irrigation. The sowing methods had no noteworthy influence on the ripening or the weight of the wheat grains. Barley responded to the sowing methods to a lesser extent than did wheat. Bands 7 cm wide with 12.5 cm spacing resulted in 5 ± 2 % higher wheat yields and 2 ± 1 % higher barley yields than did bands 10 cm wide with 25 cm spacing. The results indicate that the band method with relatively small spacings between the bands is worth further and more detailed study. An increase in the seeding rate from low to »normal» increased the yields, speeded up ripening and decreased the weight of grains, but when normal seeding rates were exceeded the grain yields were not further improved. Rolling speeded up ripening but did not significantly increase the grain yields. Of the factors included in the study, the sprinkler irrigation affected the yields most by increasing the grain yields of wheat by 23 ± 22 % and those of barley by 29 ± 9 %.
url https://journal.fi/afs/article/view/71818
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AT osmokara sowingofspringcerealsinbroadbandsandtheeffectofsowingraterollingandirrigationontheresults
AT leoautio sowingofspringcerealsinbroadbandsandtheeffectofsowingraterollingandirrigationontheresults
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